Over 15 years, a pediatric-specific ambulatory surgery center managed increasing patient acuity with no change in unplanned emergency visits or hospital admissions.
Observational
No
A pediatric-specific ambulatory surgery center successfully managed increasing patient acuity over 15 years without increasing unplanned hospital admissions or emergency visits.
INTRODUCTION: Ambulatory surgery has become the dominant model of surgical care in the United States as surgical procedures increasingly shifted from inpatient to outpatient sites of practice. Similar growth in volumes has been observed in pediatric practice. Investigators have highlighted the challenges and opportunities in this current climate, including increasing medical and procedural complexity, difficulties matching pediatric-specific resources to meet the child's perioperative needs and unique risk profile, and limited availability of pediatric ambulatory surgical and anesthesia guidelines of care. Further, they call out the complete lack of pediatric outcomes data to help inform the creation and modification of national care guidelines. METHODS: To address these challenges, we chose to complete a comprehensive, single center retrospective review of our process, outcome, and balancing metrics contained in our EMR from our free-standing pediatric ambulatory surgery center (ASC) since its opening in July 2010 through December 2024. A commercial software system extracted de-identified, aggregated health data from the system's EMR. The data are processed and presented in statistical process control charts. This methodology allows clinicians to distinguish between common cause and special cause variation. RESULTS: Patient and procedural acuity increased as the system matured via lower age cutoffs and higher ASA physical status scores. This higher acuity was managed with a dynamic and evolving screening process, resulting in no change in unplanned emergency visit or hospital admissions. The COVID-19 pandemic had profound impacts on ASC operations and case mix, including a temporary closure. DISCUSSION: This retrospective, observational assessment created a detailed picture of our ASC practice changes over time. A pediatric-specific ASC with appropriate patient selection processes, practice guidelines, and clinical expertise successfully mitigated the risk of complications. These results are not generalizable to non-academic, community ambulatory facilities due to the unique characteristics of our pediatric-specific academic center.
Low et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Pediatric ambulatory surgery. Pediatric-specific ambulatory surgery center care was evaluated on Unplanned emergency visits or hospital admissions. Over 15 years, a pediatric-specific ambulatory surgery center managed increasing patient acuity with no change in unplanned emergency visits or hospital admissions.
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